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So when is judicial activism good and when is it bad? Just asking.
Good when upholding individual rights and expanding their reach in the face of government power.
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So when is judicial activism good and when is it bad? Just asking.
It wouldn't be meaningless, just perhaps less effective. But an ineffective law is not an unconstitutional one, huge difference. If the law would not be as effective without the mandate, then it's up to Congress to revise it in light of the judicial guidance they have received. Striking down the entire thing (when it is clearly not all unconstitutional) is a gross overreach. It's judicial activism, you know, the thing conservatives abhor when it doesn't go their way.
He quoted Obama's campaign statements in the summary just to rub it in, and he even referenced the Boston Tea Party, lol. In parts the opinion reads more like a political rant than a legal ruling.
So? He was providing proof that the mandate is not necessary for reform to be achieved, which Obama himself stated.
So when is judicial activism good and when is it bad? Just asking.
Except it isn't. Your definition of judicial activism is overly broad, and you've been told this in the past. As the opinion stated, quite clearly (I take it you have yet to read it, since you don't actually understand what he was saying), the mandate is so entwined in the law as a whole that he could not just strike down the mandate.
So? He was providing proof that the mandate is not necessary for reform to be achieved, which Obama himself stated.
1. with approximately 2/3 of the US citizens against ObamaCare
And of course, the rest of the world will laugh once again when a country as powerful and important as the US still can't sort out affordable healthcare for its citizens.
how is that not relevant?
driving is defined as a privilege. if you want to exercise that privilege, you're required to pass a test and buy insurance.
I can decide to not drive, and I wouldn't have to purchase auto insurance.
what would I have to do if I decided that I didn't want to purchase health insurance? (regardless of the wisdom of that choice)
Yes, that is true, but if you chose not to drive, you wouldn't drive. You wouldn't buy insurance and no one would force you. Easy.
If however, you choose not to buy health insurance, and you need to have your gall baldder removed, the emergency rooms MUST treat you. If you didn't pay for insurance, we can't deny you care (at the same level as those who did buy it). Well, who pays the hosp? Who pays the MD? The state does and the insurance companies do. (translation YOU -through your taxes and higher premiums. It is called 'cost shifting')
So the real problem is whether we should allow people to continue to get free coverage (at the emergency room) or require people to buy at least the minimum insurance. If EVERYONE is in the "pool" then the overall risk decreases and so does all our premiums. Good for everyone.
On the other hand, the alternative is to keep things the way they are (Americans pay the MOST for health care today yet we're # 17 in longevity in industrialized countries.) or simply let the guy with the gall bladder die on the street.
Seems that enrolling everyone is the lesser evil.
Seems that enrolling everyone is the lesser evil.
The only ones that complain about judicial activism are conservatives.
When they agree with the judge, it's the greatest thing ever. When they don't, they want a mob to overthrow the judge.
The only time I see liberals say anything about judicial activism is when making fun of conservatives.
Except its not. It grants the federal government authority its never had, and authority that it will most certainly abuse if its allowed to stand.
Except that if this is declared constitutional, there's no limit at all to what the government can decree. They could declare that fast food is bad, and shut down the industry. They could declare that plastic packaging is a waste of resources, and require everyone to use something else. If they can require citizens to buy some particular thing, they can do anything at all in the economy.
Then it will be up to us to keep them in check. Seems counterintuititive to suppress a positive idea because it might be abused somewhere down the road... Having at least quasi-competition between insurance comanies is a WHOLE lot better than having one system (like medicare) for the entire country. If costs keep rising, we will be on a one-payer system and NOBODY wants that. Yet even that is better than having the most costly system in the world- by a factor of almost 2, but be the 17th most efficient in care. Not to mention what all this extra cost is doing to our competitiveness on the world stage. not to mention that companies are delaying hiring as long as possible- one of the reasons is skyrocketing health care. My company's plan went up 8% over last year. (raises were 1.5% HELLO??) Reason? The "Pool' we're in -13,000 lives- is too small to amortize all the costs. (Starting to sound like my Master's Thesis, sorry)
By the way, have you ever noticed that the top 5-6 auto insurance companies fight it out every night on prime time TV over price? Wouldn't that be nice to see for health insurance? Have them offer "15 minutes to save us $500/year?" Competition would be a good thing but they won't compete now because the game is rigged.
Except its not. It grants the federal government authority its never had, and authority that it will most certainly abuse if its allowed to stand.
No it doesn't.
They can force you to buy car insurance (ok that's state gov but still gov).
Same deal.
And don't say "you can choose to not drive". That's true but it doesn't change the analogy.
One could conceivably survive without a car if you made other arrangements. On the other hand everyone will use the health care system at some point or another. So it is the same model (requiring insurance from all who participate).
I'm sure joaama will NEVER make that statement again...
Wow, you really are BearDaddy, you even use the smilies like he did. Congrats at being found out.
